Friday, July 8, 2011

From the UCC Network: 07/08/2011 "Salty Language"


Salty Language

Excerpt from Colossians 4:2-18

"Let your speech always be gracious, seasoned with salt."

Reflection by Martin B. Copenhaver

Words matter.  Words can either inspire or discourage, heal or hurt, offer a blessing or a curse.  As someone once told me, "Whoever said, 'Sticks and stones can break my bones, but words can never hurt me,' must have lived among deaf mutes."  As it says in Proverbs, "Rash words are like sword thrusts, but the tongue of the wise brings healing" (12:18).

So the Apostle Paul counsels us to mind our tongues, to act as if words matter:  "Let your speech always be gracious, seasoned with salt."  He is not advocating "salty language" in the way we use the term.  In the Bible salt means many things.  It preserves food, keeping it pure.  Salt also is treasured as a source of healing.  So Paul wants us to tend to our words as if they have that kind of power.

When I served First Congregational Church (UCC) in Burlington, Vermont, one of my colleagues was Thelma Norton, a great saint of the church.  In her role as Parish Visitor she had intimate access to the lives of hundreds of people and yet I never heard her speak ill of a single person.  When, in the course of conversation, she came even close to speaking a harsh or judgmental word, she would stop herself and say, "Well, I'll just say Amen to that," and then move on.  Her speech was always gracious in a way that inspires me still.  Her language was salted in the way Paul had in mind.  She was the kind of "salt of the earth" whom Jesus praised.

Prayer

Dear God, help me to tend to my words as if they matter.  Because they do.  Amen.
Martin Copenhaver
About the Author
Martin B. Copenhaver is Senior Pastor, Wellesley Congregational Church, United Church of Christ, Wellesley, Massachusetts. He is the author, with Lillian Daniel, of This Odd and Wondrous Calling: the Public and Private Lives of Two Ministers.

Alabama's New, Draconian Anti-Immigrant Law

Dear Friend,
Today we filed a lawsuit against Alabama's new, draconian anti-immigrant law. The New York Times calls it "the most extreme" in the nation. It makes Arizona's anti-immigrant legislation look like child's play.
The Alabama law makes it a crime for anyone—citizen and non-citizen alike—to drive someone who is undocumented to church or a hospital. It requires school children to report on the immigration status of their parents. It even prevents refugees who have been granted asylum in our country from going to a state university. And, without question, it will lead to massive racial profiling and discourage victims of crime from cooperating with the police.
At the press conference we held today, one of our clients—a minister—said that the law "violates core values of various faiths because it criminalizes acts of love and hospitality."
The law reminds me of the Jim Crow era. It will create an underclass of people who are denied equal protection under the law, just like the racist laws that stained Alabama and the Deep South for many decades.
Like the racists laws we've fought in the past, we cannot let this one stand.
Thank you for your support and dedication to justice. I'll keep you updated as this important legal battle progresses.
Morris Dees photoWith my sincere thanks,
Morris Dees
Morris Dees
Founder, Southern Poverty Law Center